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Some former Gang Strike Force cops under review

Fourteen employees from at least three law
enforcement agencies face internal reviews for alleged wrongdoing
while working on the now-defunct Metro Gang Strike Force.

A special panel reported last month it found "appalling and
outrageous" misconduct by some members of the gang-fighting unit.
On Wednesday, panel co-chair Andy Luger gave the names of those
officers to their employers.

The Minneapolis Police Department, the Ramsey County Sheriff's
Office, and the St. Paul Police Department confirmed they have
employees on the list and all three agencies said they started
internal investigations.

Officials have not released the names of the employees or the
allegations against them. However, the report by Luger and retired
FBI agent John Egelhof found instances in which officers took
televisions and jewelry for their own use, or seized thousands of
dollars from people with no gang ties.

The panel review was launched after a Legislative Auditor's
report concluded the gang-fighting unit lacked internal controls to
safeguard seized and forfeited property or track its finances.

No employees of the union have been charged, but the FBI is
investigating.

"Our ability to police requires the communities' trust, and
these allegations fundamentally undermine the faith and trust that
we work so hard to earn," Minneapolis police Chief Tim Dolan said
in a statement.

Seven officers from his department who were assigned to the
strike force face allegations of misconduct, he said. He expressed
his disappointment and promised "rigorous and thorough"
investigations.

St. Paul Police Department spokesman Sgt. Paul Schnell five
current members of the department and one past member were on the
list. Two of the active members face potential allegations of
criminal wrongdoing, Schnell said, and they have been reassigned to
administrative duty. The others may have violated procedures and
will be subjects of an internal investigation.

Schnell said Chief John Harrington also was concerned and wants
to "get on with ensuring that Minnesota has the kind of law
enforcement that it has come to expect - a highly transparent and
trusted law enforcement service."

The Ramsey County Sheriff's Office said one of its deputies
might have handled evidence improperly. Spokeswoman Holli Drinkwine
said the department started an internal investigation on Aug. 24,
after the original release of the Luger-Egelhof report.

Drinkwine said the deputy has been reassigned pending the
outcome of the investigation. She said: "We have no knowledge of
an active FBI investigation into our deputy."

Bud Shaver, West St. Paul Police Chief and chair of the Metro
Gang Strike Force advisory board, said he wants the officers' names
released.

"I don't want to see anybody get into trouble," he said. "But
all of these allegations were on all Minnesota law enforcement
shoulders. ... It tarnishes everybody."

He said he wants the attention instead to be on the "small
fraction of officers" involved in alleged misconduct.

"Get the focus on the people that it needs to focus on. Let the
processes continue to work ... and let's move on," he said.

The Metro Gang Strike Force was created in 2005 by the state
Legislature so agencies could coordinate gang investigations. The
goal was to prevent gang violence and to arrest and prosecute those
involved in gang-related crimes. It is a successor to the Minnesota
Gang Strike Force, created in 1997.

In recent years, it has consisted of more than 30 law
enforcement officers and supervisors from various departments and
agencies.